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Adding first Super

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Cobby:
Hi All
Im Located in South West Sydney and as you know, we've had a pretty warm Winter.
I started my hive mid January this year and although it was a slow start, Im pretty happy with the hives progress over winter. There is plenty of brood and capped honey but not as much pollen as I would have expected. But being very new to BK, that is an uneducated observation. 7 out of my 8 frames are close to full and the 8th frame is still pretty empty. Up until last week this frame was the outside frame and i have moved it in one position.
From what I have read, I think the hive is ready for its first honey super. My question is, is it still too cold to add a super and should I wait a few weeks or longer?
Also, what size supers do most people use first? Ideal or full Size?
Thanks for your advice

Bamboo:
Hi Cobby
Personally I wouldn't be rushing to add a super at this time of year unless you can positively identify that you have a decent flow happening. I would take out a full frame or so and replace with an empty one if you are worried about room in the hive and swarming although I think it is way to early for swarms where you are, but like you said you still have an empty frame and I guess you are running an 8 frame hive? Being new I am guessing you would be adding foundation and not drawn comb. Wax comb is resource hungry for bees, what I mean by that is that accepted wisdom (although I have not seen any study that confirms it) says that for every kg of wax produced it takes 8kg of nectar to produce it. So adding foundation will take care of any incoming nectar if you are worried about getting honey bound. Just make sure you have enough brood comb for the queen when she starts laying in earnest come spring.

You are still getting low single digit temps overnight and will for some time yet, adding a  super just doubles the space that the bees have to keep at 36C, creates more space that has to be defended against intruders, SHB, mice, wax moth etc. I would continue to manage your hive as a single till you really get a flow then add a super. You will be able to smell the nectar coming in when you get a flow.

What you add is up to you and what you prefer. I run 10 frame deeps although I am seriously considering 8 frame deeps. A 10 frame deep full of honey is pretty heavy to hoist around the joint or maybe I am just getting weaker!

Cheers

Cobby:
Thanks for the advice. It makes sense. Yes, Im running an 8 frame hive and using foundation in my frames. i'll just have to be patient for now. Its probably a good time to learn some hive management.
Thanks again

Bamboo:
Patience with bees is essential. Bees will do what bees do when they are good and ready. We (humans) often try and force things to happen the way we want them to happen and it often ends in tears.

Nature has been doing this stuff for 10's of thousands of years, they have worked out a system that works for them that ensures their survival.

I always say to new beekeepers "There is only one real reason to keep bees, and that is because they are fascinating. If you just want honey, make friends with a beekeeper".
With that in mind it is important to understand what a hive is all about and why they they do the things they do.

In nature bees find a home that will give them shelter from the elements and protection from predators. Their only aim is survival of the colony, to do this they collect nectar and pollen. They collect enough not only for the following winter but insurance stores as well, if all goes well and they run out of room in their current home a decision is made to expand the colony and raise another queen to swarm with and start again. The existing colony remains till their queen ages and is no longer able to ensure the viability of the colony so they will raise another queen to replace her and so the cycle continues.

I can't stress how important it is to try understand how things work in nature and then you can start to manage your bees in conjunction with how they would do it themselves. It just makes things easier if you look at beekeeping from the larger viewpoint rather than "I have a hive where is my honey?". Work with the bees and help them, this is management that will benefit you and the bees.

By all means read all you can and learn from the many great books written about beekeeping but conditions vary all over the world, keep your bees according to your climate and resources (nectar, pollen supplies), learn what gums or trees are in your area, when they normally flower and what time of year after a warm stretch, immediately after rain etc. When you start to learn these things you will notice when things change as they seem to be often doing with our changing climate, plants that normally flower in October flowering in August. You become much more aware of our environment. Anyway that is all up to you if you are interested in it.


Your hive should do well as you look to be pretty close to the national park and all the resources that are in there.

Good luck.

Bee North:

--- Quote from: Cobby on August 24, 2019, 06:34:25 am ---
Also, what size supers do most people use first? Ideal or full Size?


--- End quote ---
Mate i havent been doing this for long but i have learnt a few things.
You think you will only ever have one hive. But bees expand and you become sort of obsessed with them....you end up with more hives!
I suggest you run the same size super as your brood. That way you can swap your frames around and boxes as you need to.
You will get different opinions on size because all sizes work, but having the same size make life easier and gives you more options, especially when you end up with two or three hives.
Patients is hard...buying gear is easy!


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